Most sites similar to Meh work by buying items in bulk at auctions. Most of the items are previous models, overstock, and closeout items that the manufacturer or store is trying to get rid of to make room for the newer models. So Meh is able to buy these items for pennies then turn around and sell them to us customers for dollars – not literally, of course.
Some items sell out. The items that don’t sell out are listed on MorningSave. The price is increased a bit, but is still low and often very competitive.
Most items end up eventually selling to their completion on MorningSave. I’ve noticed sometimes items that didn’t sell out will return for the Meh-rathon for a second or even third go 'round.
On top of this, you have the MVPs who pay for monthly subscriptions. Some of which I’m quite sure go month(s) without making a purchase.
While I don’t know what Meh prices buys the items for, I can see this being viable assuming their margins make sense. How viable is the question that only Meh can really answer, but hopefully this gives you an idea as to how Meh (and their sister sites) work.
I’m not sure where you’re looking. You can buy a toothbrush right now.
yes.
edit: sorry. fuck yes.
@carl669 Oh, the bot doesn’t pick up the bad language if it comes during an edit, eh? Fascinating. (Barely.)
Edit: Fucking amazing, actually. We’ve outwitted that fuck-head of a fuck-bot.
@carl669 @UncleVinny
Fuck that.
@carl669 add another one to the count
see that now, not earlier
@tcalcalde you maybe were on the detail page which looks basically the same as the home page. Click on the logo to see the most recent crap.
@tcalcalde I always use mehtracker.com to make sure I get to the current meh deal.
OK, THIS IS ALL WELL AND GOOD, BUT WHY WON’T ANYBODY SAY IF MEH IS STILL VIABLE
@therealjrn that depends - how full is your closet?
@therealjrn
Meh needs Viagra? Still?
@therealjrn Sure it is, they have worked very hard to build up a huge core clientele of speaker, headphone, and earbud collectors.
No.
It’s BUYable.
@011899988199911
Noted.
-Jeff B.
Most sites similar to Meh work by buying items in bulk at auctions. Most of the items are previous models, overstock, and closeout items that the manufacturer or store is trying to get rid of to make room for the newer models. So Meh is able to buy these items for pennies then turn around and sell them to us customers for dollars – not literally, of course.
Some items sell out. The items that don’t sell out are listed on MorningSave. The price is increased a bit, but is still low and often very competitive.
Most items end up eventually selling to their completion on MorningSave. I’ve noticed sometimes items that didn’t sell out will return for the Meh-rathon for a second or even third go 'round.
On top of this, you have the MVPs who pay for monthly subscriptions. Some of which I’m quite sure go month(s) without making a purchase.
While I don’t know what Meh prices buys the items for, I can see this being viable assuming their margins make sense. How viable is the question that only Meh can really answer, but hopefully this gives you an idea as to how Meh (and their sister sites) work.
@theonlybuster
and then there is casemates and mediocretees (oh yeah, it’s not spelled like that)
/